Energy from a vacuum

Matthew Redmond ( (no email) )
Wed, 6 Jan 1999 23:34:15 +1300

Greetings,

Probably already known but here is my "new" view on attaining energy from a
vacuum.

First question is "how and why do you get more energy out of a vacuum?" I
mean if you think about it the only thing that a vacuum is, is and area of
little to no air. That is all. This means that the only things passing
through it will be things like magnetic fields etc.

So why does this absence of air help? If we consider that all things have
their own "frequencies," then it would be safe to assume that air would be
resonating at a whole heap of different frequencies. If we also assume that
there are certain frequencies that the aether resonates at, then all these
different "things" are going to be interfering with each other creating a
"beat" pattern. So it would seem logical to evacuate, say a tube, of its
air to reduce this "beat" pattern. Now what?

What do you do now if you want to "tap" into this now cleaned wave. If you
are looking for electrical tapping then you can add a gas (or whatever you
do) to create a plasma tube. The reason it does not matter to add this gas
is that you can alter the frequency of the plasma by attaching a frequency
generator to tune it to one of the frequencies that the aether resonates at.
If you get it matched correctly then when both "waves" are resonating
together, the outcome will be higher amplitude. This means that the plasma
will be outputting more energy than what it originally was supplied with.

Almost too easy.

Matthew.